This article discusses an oral history doctoral research project about the little known, yet critical role of the court clerk in Crown Courts. It is surprising that even though Crown Court clerks have been pivotal in trials of the most serious criminal offences, they have been neglected in legal scholarship. This research project has contributed towards filling an absence in the academic literature about the nature and function of their vital work between 1972 and 2015, and was carried out by Dvora Liberman, in partnership with the London School of Economics Legal Biography Project and National Life Stories, British Library.

]]>https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1472669618000282?urlappend=%3Fsource=rssdoi:10.1017/S1472669618000282Custodians of Continuity in an Era of Change: an Oral History of the Everyday Lives of Crown Court Clerks Between 1972 and 201512012710.1017/S1472669618000282https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S14726696180002822018-10-09Legal Information Management2018-10-09Liberman, Dvora

This article, written by Helen Garner, reviews the progress of the Moys Reclassification Project at the Bodleian Law Library and covers the issues relating to the lessons learnt and the benefits of changing to a different classification scheme. The Bodleian Law Library started work on the Moys Reclassification Project in 2006 and work is still on-going to complete the project.

]]>https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1472669618000294?urlappend=%3Fsource=rssdoi:10.1017/S1472669618000294Carry on Classifying! The Moys Reclassification Project at the Bodleian Law Library12813610.1017/S1472669618000294https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S14726696180002942018-10-09Legal Information Management2018-10-09Garner, Helen

In this article Harpreet Dhillon recounts the experience and impact of Middle Temple Library's transition from an alphabetical organisation of textbooks to a subject order using the Moys Classification Scheme.

The McCann FitzGerald library provides a library and information service to one of Ireland's premier law firms. As Megan Guthrie explains, it was decided to reclassify the library collection using the Moys Classification Scheme for Legal Materials1 to enhance and improve the flow of the collection. It also provided an opportunity to conduct a stocktake of library material. The project was broken down into three main steps: assigning a Moys number, relabelling the physical material and updating the library management system. There were a number of challenges including the need to modify or add to the Moys numbers and finding the optimal process for relabelling and accounting for the material. It was necessary to adapt the initial plan throughout the project to account for any obstacles or restrictions that were encountered.

This paper by Victoria Elizabeth Baranow is a reflective piece after co-moderating a session at the 2017 CALL Conference in Ottawa with Shaunna Mireau. The session was titled ‘Unconference Through the Fishbowl: The Changing Role of Law Librarians in the Mix of an Evolving Legal Profession.’ A play-by-play article on the session was written based on notes and recollections from the session and published in the TALL Quarterly, the journal by the Toronto Association of Law Libraries.1 The article was used as the basis for this paper; which goes one step further in attempting to answer some of the big questions we are faced with each day while also questioning some of the assumptions and wider cultural forces at play in our law librarianship profession.**

]]>https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1472669618000324?urlappend=%3Fsource=rssdoi:10.1017/S1472669618000324Reflections in the Fishbowl: the Changing Role of Law Librarians in the Mix of an Evolving Legal Profession14715310.1017/S1472669618000324https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S14726696180003242018-10-09Legal Information Management2018-10-09Baranow, Victoria Elizabeth

Although all the international instruments (treaties, conventions, etc), that shape criminal policy concerning drug trafficking in the Latin American region, converge and given the commitment of the states to go in the same direction, nevertheless it is quite difficult to conduct good research in the subject. This is due to multiple, and constant, reforms in the local legislation, the use of different legal terms and the context of the right to privacy in each country. This article, written by Gloria Orrego Hoyos and Esteban Pizá, addresses the main legal instruments applicable to the general topic of drug trafficking, and concerning personal consumption or minimum dose, and highlights the problems and obstacles faced with regard to conducting research about drug trafficking in the Latin American region.

In this article Caroline Mack provides an introduction to knowledge and information management services in the Legal Directorate of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. She describes the development of the organisation's library services in recent years, then traces the development of her own role from a Legal Librarian to a Knowledge and Information Manager. While continuing to maintain a print and electronic library service for its lawyers, the Legal Directorate has increasingly recognised the value of effective knowledge and information management in all areas of its work. The article outlines the decision to implement a Directorate-wide knowledge and information management Strategy and the impact this has had on its work. The article also considers how the provision of library and information services are affected by external pressures and events, such as the change in priorities brought about by the EU Referendum result.

]]>https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1472669618000348?urlappend=%3Fsource=rssdoi:10.1017/S1472669618000348Legal Knowledge and Information at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office16116610.1017/S1472669618000348https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S14726696180003482018-10-09Legal Information Management2018-10-09Mack, Caroline

In this two-part feature, Dr Matthew Terrell provides a brief introduction to a new initiative that was launched by Justis in 2017: the inaugural Law and Technology International Writing Competition. This was a competition aimed at attracting students to write a 1,000 word piece in the style of a blog entry. The winner was Róisín Costello from Trinity College Dublin and her article, entitled ‘The Tortoise and the Hare? Due Process and Unconstitutionally Obtained Evidence in the Digital Age’, follows this introduction.

Under Moore's Law the number of transistors in an integrated circuit doubles relative to cost and size every two years. In practical terms this means personal computers become twice as powerful and half as large every 24 months. However, this rapid rate of proliferation and improvement has not been mirrored in law.

]]>https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S1472669618000373?urlappend=%3Fsource=rssdoi:10.1017/S1472669618000373The Tortoise and the Hare? Due Process and Unconstitutionally Obtained Evidence in the Digital Age16917010.1017/S1472669618000373https://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S14726696180003732018-10-09Legal Information Management2018-10-09Costello, Róisín

This is the latest report analysing the results of the Society of Legal Scholars and BIALL Survey. It has been written by David Gee, Deputy Librarian at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London.